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by W0lf
1258 days ago
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I happen to have read her book on Cracking the Coding Interview which I found was a nice refresher for interview-type like questions. She writes: > And for all of this I still blunder my way through an exercise to write a function which returns a boolean in response to the question of whether sequence A is a sub-sequence of sequence B. I still draw a blank when asked what the magnitude of complexity is for the guests function I just wrote which I have a hard time believing as she covers this in a whole chapter of her own book. Clearly she knows how to do this stuff, given that she wrote the book herself. My guess is that either the (US) market is currently facing a recession which has hit the dev market as well by now or she is somewhat of a generalist with no deep knowledge of a specific area and the companies she were interviewing for are searching for a specialized person rather. |
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Businesses say they can't get enough knowledgeworkers
Knowledgeworkers say they can't get enough business
These are mutually exclusive and cannot both be true. The reality is nerds have a sales problem. You can't just hoodie and flipflop your way through a job interview because the majority of us have roughly similar skillsets, so the person with a tucked in shirt and punctual habits will get the job every time.
Nobody buys a broken banana. Stop being that banana. The modern devs making the money know how to sell their strengths. If you don't believe in you, don't expect someone to pay you for that.